The Workers’ Party (WP) had previously maintained that it was not looking to form the next government, but the tune may now have changed.
Its candidate in East Coast Group Representation Constituency, former Non-Constituency Member of Parliament Gerald Giam said the party has to plan for a time when they are ready to.
Its candidate in neighbouring single-ward Fengshan, Dennis Tan has also said: “In the longer term, we should look to have a two-party system whereby another party must be ready to form the government as the ruling party declines.”
To what extent does the WP’s election strategy reflect this change?
If the WP is hoping to be the second party in the two-party system, then it is building it step by step rather than doing it by leaps and bounds – this is demonstrated by its decision to keep its two top guns, Mr Low Thia Khiang and Ms Sylvia Lim in Aljunied GRC.
Should either have decided to helm the team in East Coast GRC, it may have signalled that they would make a decisive play for that in GE2015.
Of course, it may well be that Mr Low and Ms Lim are tied down in Aljunied GRC by considerations about whether there are legal ramifications arising out of the governance challenges they have faced in running the town council there over the past few years.
Nevertheless, they are now riding on the standing of their former NCMPs – Mr Yee Jenn Jong and Mr Gerald Giam – to anchor their efforts to extend influence in a more measured battle of ground-level attrition. It will also be an opportunity to initiate its fresh faces to electoral contests.
However, the PAP teams in Marine Parade GRC and East Coast GRC are primarily seasoned incumbents so it will not be easy to dislodge them save for the argument of the need for an opposition voice in Parliament, or surprises in the hustings.
The Marine Parade team is also helmed by Mr Tan Chuan Jin, one of the top catches of the GE2011 batch of candidates who took over the mantle from Singapore’s second prime minister, Mr Goh Chok Tong. Mr Goh described the election as one that is centred on his party and the country’s leadership transition.
The East Coast GRC team is helmed by Mr Lim Swee Say who received special mention from Prime Minister (PM) Lee Hsien Loong in the latter’s National Day Rally Speech on 23 August. He said that Mr Lim had an international standing and urged voters to return folks like him to Parliament and government. His team includes two junior ministers.
Some voters may feel that the seven duly elected people’s representatives from WP who were at the closing of the Parliamentary Session last week suffices. After all, the WP has argued that their presence and policy proposals in their GE2011 manifesto have been adopted by the government.
Others may feel that Singapore can afford even more opposition voices in Parliament. Mr Low’s target of 20 seats to the Opposition for a more ‘balanced’ Parliament may well be within these voters’ imagination.
In that case, it is in these two GRCs and Fengshan SMC where the WP will likely fight the hardest to turn voters from the incumbents. These are where the PAP will have to make its best effort to convince voters how it has listened to concerns and suggestions from across Singapore in developing its reform agenda since May 2011, especially since the opposition movement as a whole is focused on drawing voters’ attention to manpower policy inspite of the important shifts and results that have been achieved.
The WP on the other hand will have to convince voters that they can multi-task – be the opposition voice in Parliament but also be effective in local governance and certainly be above suspicion in how it manages these practicalities, as Town Councils are still integral to the political system today. MPs also have to be ‘chief social workers’ and town planners as their constituents think of the MP role in those ways too.
Singaporeans will find it difficult to envisage that two party-system or its merits otherwise.
Dr Gillian Koh is a Senior Research Fellow at IPS. View her profile here.
Photo via Mothership.sg